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How feasible is a EU Army?
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Asad Mirza | 11 Oct, 2021
Proposals for a European Union (EU) army have re-emerged after the
Afghan fiasco – but many member states still remain ‘hard to convince,
about its feasibility.
It seems that the EU has learnt the
lessons of the abrupt end of the US-led mission in Afghanistan and
furthermore after AUKUS, that the US is a trying to build a coalition of
English speaking Anglophonic nations in the defence realm and that time
has now come for them to guard their interests themselves.
In
her annual state of the union speech in the European Parliament in
Strasbourg recently, Ursula von der Leyen, a former German defence
minister, described the withdrawal of the US-led mission in Afghanistan,
and the subsequent collapse of President Ashraf Ghani's administration
troubling. She urged the European leaders to acquire the "political
will" to build up its own military force to de deployed at or prevent
any future crises.
She is also reported to be working with the
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, on issuing a "new declaration"
on EU-Nato relations by the end of the year. She has also said there
would be crises where the EU's own military force should operate
independently from both the UN and Nato.
Germany's current
Defence Minister, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer has said that von der Leyen
is right. Real EU defence depends on the political will of the member
states. That's why Germany and France must lead any such exercise.
European solidarity
For
some, this state of affairs revived the old idea of a European military
– with the EU's chief diplomat himself urging the bloc to create a
collective armed force.
"The need for more European defence has
never been as much evident as today after the events in Afghanistan," EU
foreign affairs representative Josep Borrell told journalists at a
meeting of the bloc's foreign and defence ministers in Slovenia
recently, where the Afghanistan debacle featured prominently.
The
EU needs to create a "rapid response force" of 5,000 soldiers, Borrell
said. EU military committee chairman Claudio Graziano also agreed with
the idea, which should be supported with a genuine "will to act" he is
reported to have said.
This phrase appeared once again, when
Macron talked about Afghanistan with visiting Dutch Prime Minister Mark
Rutte at the ElysEe Palace. The two leaders gave a joint statement
urging the EU to develop "strategic autonomy" so it can take "more
responsibility for its security and defence".
Going one step
further France has recently inked a defence deal for supply of 13 Rafael
jets and 3 frigates to Greece. By choosing French Rafael, Greece
rejected the bid by US's Boeing for F-16 planes.
Critics of the proposal
The
idea of common defence, one attacked by some critics of the EU as
evidence of fomenting nationalism building, has a long and chequered
history. It dates back to 1990s and the Yugoslav Wars. A joint 1998
statement by France's then President Jacques Chirac and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair declared that the EU "must have the capacity for
autonomous action, backed up by credible military forces", an assertion
which fits Emmanuel Macron very well today.
In 1999, the EU
agreed to raise a contingent of 50,000-60,000. In 2007, the bloc created
a network of two "battle groups" of 1,500 troops from each country.
They have since never been requisitioned.
Proponents of an EU
armed force that operates independently of Washington will also have to
win over sceptics within the bloc; the Baltic states and Poland are not
in favour of any new defence pact excluding the US.
In addition
perceptions within the EU states differ as to what is a threat to its
interests. For example the Baltic states consider Russia as an
existential threat as per geopolitical realities but Russia is a key
energy partner for Germany, and an ally for Hungary.
Emmanuel
Macron and Angela Merkel also backed the EU army idea in 2018, amid
suggestions that the EU "could no longer count on the United States"
under Donald Trump's leadership. Other European leaders who had
advocated for such an army have included Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor
Orban, Italy's former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Czech President
Milos Zeman and former Czech Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka.
Pushes
for an EU-force have public support, too. A 2017 Eurobarometer poll
collated by Statista found that 74 per cent of respondents in the
Netherlands and Belgium supported the idea. In France and Germany,
backing for the proposal was 65 per cent and 55 per cent percent
respectively, but in EU's traditionally more neutral countries, like
Austria (45 per cent), Ireland (46 per cent), Finland (42 per cent) and
Sweden (40 per cent) it was mellowed. In the UK, only 39 per cent of
survey respondents were in favour.
Other critics of the proposal
include Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg himself, who has warned
that an EU force "cannot defend Europe" without NATO assistance.
Military
analysts say that most EU governments can't investment more in defence
and they are further concerned about the risk of undermining Nato. In
2019 EU's 27 member states' expenditure on defence stood at 1.2 per cent
of the GDP compared with 3.4 per cent by the US.
International
security and defence analyst Brooks Tigner has also pointed to potential
funding issues. In a 2018 opinion piece for the Atlantic Council,
Tigner wrote that while the idea for an EU army might appear "impressive
on paper", but none has any realisation of what the collective cost of
operations might be. He added that the bloc would have to resolve a
plethora of other "technical, legal, and administrative differences"
that would "boil down to the most mundane things such as soldiers'
rights".
A leaders' summit dedicated to European defence will be
convened by von der Leyen and tMacron, in the first half of next year,
when France holds the rolling presidency of the EU. The concept of an EU
army would be debated and discussions will be held about "why this has
not worked in the past" at the next summit von der Leyen has said.
Overall,
as in the past, this time too it seems that the idea might get turned
down due to its feasibility but it would help politicians like Macron
and other European leaders to root for more nationalism and
nationalistic tendencies, independent of the US.
(Asad Mirza is a
political commentator based in New Delhi. He writes on Muslims,
educational, international affairs, interfaith and current affairs.
Views expressed are personal)
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